Megan Olivia Delaney v. Randy Ray Scheer

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 6, 2003
Docket03-02-00273-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Megan Olivia Delaney v. Randy Ray Scheer (Megan Olivia Delaney v. Randy Ray Scheer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Megan Olivia Delaney v. Randy Ray Scheer, (Tex. Ct. App. 2003).

Opinion

TEXAS COURT OF APPEALS, THIRD DISTRICT, AT AUSTIN

NO. 03-02-00273-CV

Megan Olivia Delaney, Appellant

v.

Randy Ray Scheer, Appellee

FROM THE COUNTY COURT AT LAW NO. 2 OF WILLIAMSON COUNTY NO. 98-1495-F368-FC2, HONORABLE ROBERT F. B. ASKIP@ MORSE, JUDGE PRESIDING

MEMORANDUM OPINION

This is an appeal from the modification of a child custody order. The father of the child,

Randy Ray Scheer, sued his ex-wife to modify the joint managing conservatorship of their daughter

established in the couple=s divorce decree. Scheer asked the court to grant him sole authority to determine

the primary residence of the child. The child=s mother, Megan Olivia Delaney, counter-sued to be named

sole managing conservator, or in the alternative, to retain the joint managing conservatorship but to remove

the geographic restriction limiting the child=s residence to within fifty miles of the state capitol. Both parties

alleged a change in circumstances, as well as the unworkability of the previous order, as predicates for

modification. The case was submitted to a jury which found that the joint managing conservatorship should

continue and that Scheer should determine the primary residence of the child. Judgment was entered on the

verdict. Delaney appeals pro se asserting jury charge error. We will affirm the judgment of the trial court.

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND The parties reached a settlement agreement in their divorce action on March 23, 1999, but

the Agreed Final Divorce Decree was not signed by the court until March 1, 2000. On July 21, 2000,

Scheer filed a motion to modify the decree by seeking the exclusive right to determine the child=s primary

residence. In his petition, he alleged that the circumstances of the parties had materially and substantially

changed since the rendition of the original order and that the order had become unworkable or

inappropriate under existing circumstances. He also alleged that the modification he sought would be in the

best interests of the child. As a factual basis for modification, he alleged that Delaney violated the decree by

moving the child=s residence outside the geographical restriction imposed by the decree. He also sought the

right to determine which day care facility the child would attend because Delaney had unilaterally changed

the child=s previously agreed-upon day care.

Delaney filed her own counter-petition alleging changed circumstances and unworkability.

She alleged that her appointment as sole managing conservator would be a positive improvement for and in

the best interest of the child. Alternatively, she sought to remain a joint managing conservator but without

the geographical restriction on her right to determine the child=s residence. Subsequently, Delaney filed an

amended counter-petition alleging that Athere has been no material and substantial change because [Scheer]

alleged that [Delaney] changed her residence located outside 50 miles radius of Travis County Courthouse

[sic] is not true in that she in fact lives within the 50 mile radius.@1 However, in the same pleading, Delaney

alleged that the circumstances of all the parties had Aso materially and substantially changed since the

rendition of the order that it has become unworkable or inappropriate under existing circumstances.@

1 Apparently, Delaney measured the distance Aas the crow files,@ and Scheer measured the

2 The case was tried to a jury. Delaney urged the court to submit the following jury question:

For the joint managing conservatorship of [the child] to be modified, it must be proved that the requested modification of . . . is a positive improvement for and in the best interest of [the child] and the following factors must also be established:

1. The circumstances of [the child] or Megan Delaney [Randy Scheer] [sic] have so materially and substantially changed since the decree on March 23, 1999 that the order has become unworkable or inappropriate under the circumstances.

QUESTION:

Has the joint managing conservatorship of [the child], Randy Ray Scheer and Megan Delaney materially and substantially changed since the rendition of the March 23, 1999 Decree of Divorce that the order has become unworkable or inappropriate under the circumstances?

Answer: _____________

The court refused to submit Delaney=s tendered jury question. Instead, the trial court submitted to the jury

the following question:

Question # 1

For the joint managing conservatorship of [the child] to be replaced by a sole managing conservatorship, it must be proved that the appointment of a sole managing conservator would be a positive improvement for and in the best interest of [the child], and one of the following three factors must also be established:

1. [the child]=s present living environment may endanger [the child]=s physical health or significantly impair [the child]=s emotional development, or

distance by the roadways.

3 2. there has been a substantial and unexcused violation of the terms and conditions established in the existing conservatorship order, or

3. the circumstances of [the child], Megan Delaney or of Randy Ray Scheer have so materially and substantially changed since the decree of divorce entered March 23, 1999, that the order has become unworkable or inappropriate under the circumstances.

Should the joint managing conservatorship be replaced by a sole managing conservatorship of the child . . . ?

The jury found that the joint managing conservatorship of the child should not be replaced with a sole

managing conservatorship and that Scheer, rather than Delaney, should have the right to determine the

primary residence of the child. Delaney brings this appeal.

DISCUSSION

On appeal, Delaney does not challenge the jury=s findings on any of the issues submitted.

She complains only of the trial court=s failure to submit her requested jury question. She argues that by

refusing her submission, the trial court improperly failed to charge the jury on Scheer=s burden to prove the

changed circumstances of the parties in order to obtain a modification. Delaney=s argument fails for several

reasons: (1) she did not preserve error; (2) the court adequately charged the jury on the various claims; (3)

Delaney judicially admitted the element of proof she contends the trial court failed to submit; and (4) she

failed to bring forth a sufficient record for a harmless error evaluation.

4 Inadequate Objection to Preserve Error

We find that Delaney failed to preserve the error of which she complains. The objection to

the charge that she lodged below was inadequate to advise the trial court of the grounds for the objection.

Further, the objection she made at trial does not match the objection Delaney urges on appeal. Her lawyer

objected only generally at trial to the refusal to submit her tendered question. Her lawyer went on to object

because Ait should be [the child]=s living environment at the time that this motion was filed, not her present

living environment where she is presently living today. But where she was living at the time of the divorce

and at the time that his motion was filed.@ There were no other objections made to the charge. On appeal,

Delaney complains that the court refused Ato submit a question to the jury on whether there had been a

material and substantial change in circumstance of the parties or the child before finding that the

conservatorship of the child could be modified.@ She does not now complain about the period of time

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